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BISHOP HARE'S INDIAN 
BOARDING SCHOOLS IN 
SOUTH DAKOTA 

By FREDERICK FOOTE JOHNSON 




THE RIGHT REVEREND WILLIAM HOBART HARE, D. D. 
BISHOP | 873—I909 



£>7 



THE purpose of this letter is to keep our benefactors 
informed of the progress of our schools and to insure 
that our friends shall know that we are sensible of their 
interest, and desire not to be forgotten. 

It is not an unnatural wish of many ot those who support 
scholarships that particular children shall be named and assigned 
to them as their special proteges ; but to comply is hardly 
practicable. The children are apt to be already named when 
admitted to the schools ; we need, in many cases, the liberty 
to keep a child for a few months only, and then supply his 
place by another ; and while we are sure that the boarding- 
schools will, as a whole, be a rich blessing, and can therefore 
guarantee that money given in their behalf will be productive, 
we cannot insure that any particular child, a small fraction of 
the whole, will turn out in a way to give satisfaction to those 
who have chosen him as the object of their hopes and charity. 
Further, the special attentions which benefactors are apt to 
bestow upon their particular proteges tend often to spoil the 
favored children, and to produce discontent in others. We 
trust, therefore, that our benefactors will ask to name only the 
scholarship which thev support, and not the child who occu- 
pies it, and look for their satisfaction, not to good results in the 
case of a particular child, which must be an uncertainty, but 
to the good effect of the schools as a whole, which is a blessed 
certainty. 

Sioux Falls, S. D., April, 1910. 



2 




ST. MARY'S GIRLS AT PLAY 



Btstjop Hare's 3?ntitan BSoartitng 
§?d)oois in ^outi) Bakota 

By FREDERICK FOOTE JOHNSON 

IT is now almost five years ago that I journeyed over for 
the first time to make a visitation as assistant to the 
beloved Bishop of South Dakota among our Sioux Indian 
brethren of the Church west of the Missouri River. Thirty 
miles from any railway point, in the midst of the unbroken 
prairie, in the evening when the Chapel service was over, in 
a rude, one-roomed log cabin lighted by a dingy lamp, with 
a fringe of Indian men about me on the cabin floor, I sat 
and listened for the first time to the Sioux Indian tongue, 
I shall never forget the weirdness of the cabin nor the 
native dignity of the several speakers as each stood up to 
address me, nor the picturesqueness of the language as it 
came to me through my interpreter. Presently, after many 
had told out their hearts, an old Indian Chief arose to tell 



3 



mc something of the story of the coming of the Gospel to 
the people of the Dakotas. U A few years ago," said he, 
"we Indians just like this cabin if you put out that light. 
We all dark and desolate and dreary. Bishop Hare, he come 
to us. He build us schools for our children. He bring us 
Holy Baptism and Confirmation and Holv Communion. He 
give us Bible and Prayer Book. He build us churches and 
chapels. He send us teachers and ministers of Jesus. Xow 
we Indians like this cabin with that lamp upon the wall; 
we all getting light." 

As I look out from my window in Sioux Falls to-day 
upon the pansy-covered mound above the grave in which 
the body of the Bishop of South Dakota rests — "The inn 
of a pilgrim on his journey to Jerusalem," — I say to my- 
self: When the new series of the stories of the triumphs 
of Christian faith is written, it will tell the story of how 
the young man, gently born, fine-fibred, delicately reared, 
splendidly educated, gat him out of his country, and from 
his kindred, and from his father's house, unto a land which 
God would show him. It will tell how, leaving the at- 
tractive intellectual atmosphere and social advantages and 
opportunities of a cultured eastern city, he built his cabin- 
home in the Dakota Territory, a waste of barren prairie, 
roamed over by wild nomad buffaloes and wild nomad 
Sioux. It will tell how, when many good people were 
saving, "What's the use of preaching the Gospel to a 
perishing race," he persisted in his mission, because he 
heard the cry of them that were in captivity and longed to 
deliver a people appointed unto death. It will tell how, 
when people everywhere who had no experimental knowledge 

4 



Gift 

The 3 




of the proposition were saying, "No good 
4fe Indian but a dead Indian," he, with a 

noble band of clergv and other teachers 
whom he grappled to his heart with hooks 
'* of steel, in the land of the Dakotas build- 

ed out of almost hopeless material a spir- 
- itual house able to resist storms ; settled 

the roving Sioux Indian in families, and 
made countless numbers of them earnest 
and devoted and consistent followers and 
teachers of the gentle Jesus. 

On the white-metal cross which the 
Bishop used to give to each person on 
whom he laid his hands in Confirmation 
among the people of 
the Dakotas is in- 
scribed the words, 
« v Iv2 £g>t)v sy^JD) " That thev might 
have life." He, following his Master, 
gave life. Six and thirty years of life 
he jovouslv gave for the spiritual and 
moral and physical and intellectual and 
material upbuilding of the Sioux — for 
no interest of the Sioux to him was for- 
eign. And when, in last October, 
God's finger touched him and he slept, 
I verily believe that the final paragraph 
of the most splendid chapter in the his- 
tory of nineteenth century missions in QLD WIND SOL Dl£R 
America was closed. Facing the setting sun 



CLOTHED IN HIS 
GLORY 

Facing the rising sun 




5 



THE LITTLE BOYS OF ST. ELIZABETH'S 



In 1873 Bishop Hare came out to this western land as the 
missionary bishop of Niobrara. He found 6,000 Indian 
children running wild, like jack-rabbits on the plains. It 
was before the Government began to make provision for the 
education of the Indian. Bishop Hare immediately appealed 
to the Church for financial help, and boarding schools were 
built, whose names are household words in the homes of 
many of the devoted and generous churchfolk of our land : 
St. Mary's and St. Elizabeth's. 

St. Mary's is for girls only. It is situated on the great 
Rosebud Reserve, 35 miles from the nearest railway point, 



6 



which is a point called 
Valentine, in Nebraska. 
This year the enrollment 
at St. Mary's is 75. The 
report for the month of 
March has just this mo- 
ment come to my desk, 
and shows an average at- 
tendance of 70. O 



Jne 



girl enrolled is 17; two ST - MARy ' s SCHOOL 

are 16; the others are aged from 5 to 15. Some of the 
little people who read this booklet may be interested to hear 
the names of some of the girls of St. Mary's. Here they 
are : Nellie At-the-Straight, Julia Bear-Doctor, Nellie Brave- 
Boy, Millie First-in-Trouble, Carrie Gunhammer, Louise 
Picket-pin, Clara Points-at-Him, Nellie Pretty-Voice-Eagle, 
Rosa Quick-Bear, Mabel Six-Shooter. There are other 
names which you would think just as queer. 

The Principal of St. Mary's, Mr. L. K. Travis, and his good 
wife, are just completing their ninth year of efficient service at 
that splendid lighthouse out on the billowy South Dakota 
prairie. There are seven assistants to the principal at St. 
Mary's, two of whom are also pupils of the school. The 
following extract: from a letter of Mr. Travis may be of 
interest : 



u The school keeps five or six horses; four cows, which 
furnish milk for the school and sufficient cream and butter 
for cooking and family use; hens enough to supply eggs 
during nearly all the year, and about twenty hogs. Four 



7 



heifers are now being raised to replace the milch cows as 
they are needed. 

" A kitchen garden is cultivated which yields an abundance 
of vegetables during the season. Several hundred bushels of 
potatoes are grown, which abundantlv supply the school the 
entire school-year. 

"In the last two years considerable new ground has been 
broken, so that the general farming land for the growing of 
oats, corn, millet, etc., now includes about fifty acres. We 
cut and store for winter use fifty or sixty tons of tame hay. 

" As we have no boys at St. Mary's, these ontside operations 
depend upon the labor of the regular farmer with the assist- 
ance of the principal and a small amount of outside help 
required at harvest time." 

I have told you that St. Mary's School is in the south part 
of South Dakota, about 25 miles from the Nebraska line. It 
is for Indian girls only. St. Elizabeth's school is away up in 
the northern end of the state, on the Standing Rock Reserve, 
about 25 miles from the North Dakota line. It is for 

Indian bovs and girls. 
A monthly report which 
I falls under my eye as I 

write gives an enroll- 
ment of 25 boys and 37 
girls; a total of 62, with 
an average of 60.5. I 
am tempted to ask 
whether the averages in 
ST. ELIZABETH'S mission white schools at the East 




3 



Serving Class for Little Girls ivith Pupil Teachers at St. Mary'' s School 



put us very much to shame? Two bovs at St. Elizabeth's are 
17 years of age. The youngest lad is 8. The oldest girl at 
St. Elizabeth's is 17, and the youngest is 6. And these boys 
and girls have just the same kind of names as the St. Mary's 
girls — I mean just as funny. The Principal of St. Eliza- 
beth's, Mr. J. L. Ricker, has completed his third year of 
efficient service. In addition to his good wife he has a staff 
of five assistants. In a recent letter Mr. Ricker says : u Our 
children have all returned to school well and happy and 
everything is running as smoothly as it is possible to run. 
Everybody is working hard, for at this time of the year there 
is so much to be done in a school of this kind." 

St. Elizabeth's has a railway station of the new Chicago, 
Milwaukee & Puget Sound Railway about two miles dis- 
tant. In a few weeks through trains from Chicago to 



9 



Seattle will pass almost through the front yard of the school. 
This sometimes seems to some of us a doubtful benefit. 
But the youngsters don't agree with us on that point, for they 
like to sit on the fence and watch the train whiz by. 

But I would not have you think that all the time is spent 
in sitting on the fence. The boys have many busy hours 
each day : farming, gardening, splitting and fetching wood 
and hauling water. The girls (both at St. Elizabeth's and at 
St. Mary's) learn bread-making, cooking, laundering, general 
housework, sewing, mending, dress-making, and fancy work. 
In both schools faithful and painstaking class-room work is 
done under the patient and gentle guidance of the kindly 
teachers. Reading, writing, arithmetic and geography are 
taught. There are hymn-singing, and Bible lessons, and Cat- 
echism drill. There is bright and happy worship morning and 
evening in the school chapels. And on Sundays the children 
and their teachers meet with the congregations which assemble 
regularly in the nearby church. Well-dressed, bright-faced, 
clean-bodied, happy-hearted children are they all ; learning 
lessons and forming habits which will make them useful citi- 
zens of the state ; and learning also those things which a 
Christian ought to know and believe to his soul's health. 

To help in the support of these Indian Boarding Schools, 
Bishop Hare instituted the system of Scholarships which has 
been in use for many years. He estimated that the annual 
payment of $60 would cover the expenses of a pupil in the 
schools. Parishes, Sundav-schools, branches of the Auxiliary 
and of the Juniors, and individuals here and there, have gen- 
erously taken many Scholarships and carried them on from 
year to year. 



10 



In the example of the noble Bishop Hare, who in this 
western field laid down his life for his friends, we have a 
compelling illustration of what one man considered the cause 
of Christian missions was worthy of in the way of personal 
service, personal sacrifice; in the way of life, and love, and 
labor. 

Are there not many who read these lines who will make 
glad thank-offerings to God for this choice vessel of His 
grace, and who, from their " much " or from their " little," 
will send their gifts to carry on the work from which he rests? 





4^ Letters and freight for St. Mary's School should be addressed 
Rosebud Agency, South Dakota, via Valentine, Nebraska. 
^ Letters and freight for St. Elizabeth's School should be directed 
to Wakpala, Boreman County, South Dakota. 



I I 



SCHOLARSHIPS 

£>t iTOarg's ^cfjool (for ©iris), Kosctmii Sgrnrg, 5. Uafeota 

Shares, Each, Sixty Dollars per Annum 

Name of Share Supported by 

1 R. C. Rogers "A Member," Holy Apostles', New York, through Ni- 

obrara League. 

2 J. P. Lundy 44 A Member," Holy Apostles', New York, through Ni- 

obrara League. 

3 Sarah Whitman Bible Class Trinity Church, through Dakota League, Boston, Mass. 

4 Calvary ... .Calvary Sunday-school, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 

5 St. Luke's St. Luke's Sunday-school, Montclair, N. J. 

6 Sophie (Endowed.) The late Mrs. John Carter Brown, Provi- 

dence, R. I. 

7 Christ Church Christ Church Sunday-school, New York, N. Y. 

8 H. H. Houston St. Peter's Sunday-school, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa. 

9 St. John's Sunday School St. John's Sunday-school, Providence, R. I. 

10 G. J. Greer (In Memoriam) Zion and St. Timothy's, New York, through Niobrara 

League. 

11 Lucretia M. Dexter (In Memoriam) Henry Dexter, New York, N. Y. 

12 Mary E. Hinman (In Memoriam )..( Endowed. ) Members of the Indian League Assn. 

13 Grace H. Hamlen Memorial Members Dakota League, and personal Friends, Massa- 

chusetts. 

14 Bishop McLaren Through Chicago Branch Junior Auxiliary. 

15 Cotheal Memorial ... .Miss E. Cotheal, New York, through Niobrara League. 

16 St. George's St. George's, New York, through Niobrara League. 

17 Compo Mrs. William R. McCready and Mrs. John B. Morris, 

St. Bartholomew's, New York, thro' Niobrara League. 

18 Charles Easton Mrs. Edward Fuller, Churchof thelncarnation, New York. 

( Endowed. ) 

19 Dr. A. T. Twing "A Friend," New York, N. Y. ( Endowed. ) 

20 Henry Herbert Smythe A Member," Trinity Church, Boston, Mass., through 

Woman's Auxiliary. 

21 Mortimer Memorial (Endowed.) The late Miss Matilda S. Mortimer, New 

York, N. Y. 

22 James R. Swords (In Memoriam ) . . Miss P. C. Swords, Trinity Chapel, N. Y., thro Nio. Lg. 

23 Frances Lathrop Fiske Rev. George S Fiske, St. John's (East) Boston, Mass., 

through Women's Auxiliary. 

24 Rev. Dr. E. A. Bradley St. Agnes' Chapel, New York, Woman's Auxiliary, 

through Niobrara League. 

25 Holy Trinity Holy Trinity, Indians' Hope Association, Phila., Pa. 

^.6 Grace M. Lane Mrs. Edward V. Z. Lane, Church of the Incarnation, 

New York, through Niobrara League. 

27 Laura Davis (In Memoriam) Philadelphia, Pa. (Endowed.) 

28 Sarah Swayne Mrs. Edward Parsons, New York, N. Y. 

29 Harry and Louise (In Memoriam) Faith," St. James' Church, Zanesville, Ohio. 

30 Cora Lyman (In Memoriam) "A Member," Trinity Church, Boston, Mass., Woman's 

Auxiliary. 

31 Calvary Calvary Sunday-school, Pittsburg, Pa. 

32 Swannanoa "A Member," Trinity Church, Boston, Mass., through 

Woman's Auxiliary. 



12 



33 David J. Ely Memorial (Endoweu. | The late Mrs. D. J. Ely, Church of the 

Incarnation, New York, N. Y. 

34 William M. Dane Memorial, Junior Auxiliary, Baltimore, Md. 

35 St. Agnes St. Agnes' Chapei, " A Member," tnr^ugh Niobrara 

League, New Y'ork, N. Y . 

36 Jeannie Alston ) ace church Richmond Va> 

37 Little Anna j 1 1 

38 The Drifton St. James', Infant School of Mrs. Eckley B. Coxe, Drif- 

ton, Fa. 

39 Shrewsbury .Shrewsbury Br. Woman's Auxiliary. Shrewsbury, Md. 

4c Smith College, Missionary Society.. Northampton, Mass. 

41 Indians' Hope Indians' Hope Association, Diocese ot Pennsylvania. 

42 Mary H. Rochester Southern Ohio Branch Woman's Auxiliarv. 

43 Bishop McCormick Western Michigan Branch Woman's Auxiliary. 

44 Annie Flower Paui Christ Church Sunday-school, Philadelphia, Pa. 

45 Loving Mother Miss S. E. Whittemore, Chairman Dakota League, Mass. 

46 Mary M. Lines Newark Branch Woman's Auxiliarv. 



i3Iuat)cti)'s irrljool (for Horn anft ©trig), ^tanimg l\oriv 
iifscrbf, ~. Dakota 

Shares, Each, Sixty Dollars per Annum 

Name of .-hare Supported by 

1 Richard Newton " A Friend,"' Texas. 

2 Meredith Norris (In Memoriam) ..Endowed by Mrs. John Markoe, Philadelphia, Pa. 

3 Walter Nichols Hart (Endowed.) A Lady, through Woman's Auxiliary. 

4 " M. M. E.' (In Memoriam) ..The Rev. Alfred L. Elw vn, Philadelphia, Pa. 

5 Charlotte Augusta Astor (In Mem. ) The Lenten Indian League of N. Y., thro 1 Niob. League. 

6 Al Saints' . Ail Saints' Sunday-school, Frederick, Md. 

7 Ivy Lyons (In Memoriam) (Endowed.) — [Half Scholarship.'] 

8 Bishop Bass Ladies of St. Paul's, Newburvport, M.ss. 

9 Bishop Randall _ Messiah Sundav-school, Boston, Mass. 

ic Arthur Brooks Church of the Incarnation, NewYork. thro' Niob. League. 

11 Joseph B. Collins " A Friend," New York, (Endowed. ) 

12 Nellie Rogers Robinson St. Andrew's, Louisville Kv... through Woman's Aux. 

13 Trinity Memorial " A Member," Trinity Church Moorestown, N. J. 

14 George L. Williams Mrs L Williams, Transfiguration, New York, through 

Niobrara League. 

15 Ellen E. Robinson Western Michigan Branch Woman's Auxiliary. 

16 Har\ e\ M. Nelson • v r Miss Nelson. Grace Church, New York, through 

17 Emily Nelson (In Memoriam). XT - , T 1 fc 
c iiT'ii' n j u . /•••! Niobrara League. 

iS William Reed Huntington J fc 

10 Rev. Dr. John W. Brown Ladies' Missionary Society, St. Thomas', New York, 

through Niobrara League. 

20 St. Mark's St. Mark's, Philadelphia, Pa. 

21 Charlotte " M. C. S.," New York. 

22 St. Luke's St, Luke't & Epiphanv. through Indians' Hope Asso- 

ciation, Philadelphia, Pa. 

23 Tuxedo St. Mary 1 .- Sundav-school, Tuxedo. N.Y.. thro' Nio. Lg. 

24. James M. Cush man Miss C us h man. Hoi \ Apostles', New York, thro' Nio. Lg. 

25 Newark Newark Branch Junior Auxiliarv. 



13 



26 Alice Rives Miss Ellen King, Washington, D. C. 

27 David H. Greer at. Bartholomew's Parish House, Miss Squires' Primary 

Class, New York. 

28 Elizabeth M. Graff Indians 1 Hope Association, under the will of Mrs. 

Graff", Philadelphia, Pa. 

29 Bishop Hare Holy 1 rinity, u Two Members," through Indians' 

Hope Association, Philadelphia, Pa. 

30 William B. Bodine Church of the Saviour, Philadelphia, (West) Pa., through 

Indians 1 Hope Association. 

31 Edwin Parsons Mrs. Edwin Parsons, New York, N. Y. 

32 All Saints 1 Day St. Paul's, Stockbridge, Mass 

33 De Witt (In Memoriam) Holy Innocents' Sunday-school, Albany, N. Y. 

34 Edward C. Clark (In Memoriam) . . (Endowed.) u Mrs. E. M. C," Waterburv, Ct. 

35 Bishop Lines Woman's Missionary League, Diocese of Newark. 

36 George H. Houghton ( Endowed.) Thelate Mrs. J. J. Asior, New York, N. Y. 

37 Dr Cuming Woman's Auxiliary, Diocese of Western Michigan. 

38 Rev. Geo. Murdock (In Memoriam) w L," Woman's Auxiliary, Diocese of Washington. 

39 Ohio Ohio Branch Woman's Auxiliarv. 

40 St. John's St. John's Sunday-school, Stamford, Conn. 

41 Jesse S. Bonsall (Endowed.) The late Mrs. S. R. Bonsall, Frederick, Mi. 

42 George L,. Harrison Number 2 A member of the Church, Philadelphia, Pa. 

43 Olivia M. Cutting Christ Church, New York, through Niobrara League. 

44 George C. Morris | Endowed.) " A Member," St. Peter's, Philadelphia, Pa. 

45 Grace Chantry Grace Chantry Sunday-school, New York. 

46 Christian Mason Gibson Memorial . ( Endowed.) The late Mrs. W. F. Cochran, New York, 

through Niobrara League. 

4-" Henry Lubeck David Clarkson, Zion and St. Timothy's, New York, 

through Niobrara League. 
("The Young Woman's Chapter and the Little Sisters of 

48 Junior Aux. of St. Peter's Church ! the Church, Chapters of the Junior Auxiliary, St. 

Germantown J Peter's Church, Germantown, Philadelphia, Pa., 

[ through Indians' Hope Association. 

49 Virginia I Endowed.) Mrs. St. Geo. T. Campbell, Philadelphia, Pa. 

50 Bishop Dudley Christ Church Sundav-school, Nashville, Tenn. 

51 J. B. G. St. James', Indians' Hope Association, Philadelphia, Pa. 

52 Mary H. W . Silvester Memorial . . . Advocate Memorial, Philadelphia, Pa., through Indians* 

Hope Association. 

53 Grace, W. A., New Orleans, La. 

54 Church of the Ascension Church of the Ascension, N. Y., thro' Niobrara League. 



tfiraiuatr ^rijolarsfitps 

Used for the Support of Indian Young Men who, having been 
at least partially educated, are now working a5 
Helpers, Catechists and Deacons 

1 Henry M. Beare Miss Helen King, Washington, D. C. 

2 Alfred M. Randolph Ladies of Emmanuel Church, Baltimore, Md. 

3 Thomas Streatfield Clarkson ( I n "| 

Memoriam) >Miss Lavinia Clarkson, Potsdam, N. Y. 

4 Levinus Clarkson (In Memoriam 1 I 



5 Lenten League The Lenten Indian League, of New York, through 

Niobrara League. 

6 St. Michael's St. Michael's Sunday-school, Bristol, R. I. 

7 George Zabriskie Gray St. Jonn's Memorial, Cambridge, Mass. 

8 Cornelius Kingsiand Memorial Mrs. W. M. Kingsland, Grace Church, New York, 

through Niobrara League, 
g Bishop Burgess St. Asaph's Sunday-school, Bala, Pa. 

i j James M. Lawton (In Memoriam ) Grace Church, New York, Mrs. J. M. Lawton, through 

Niobrara League. 

11 Covenant Covenant, through Indians' Hope Association, Phila- 

delphia, Pa. 

12 Phillips Brooks "A Friend," St. Paul's, Stockbridge, Mass. 

13 Theodore Crane Andrews(In Mem. ) Mrs. William L. Andrews, Cnurcn of the Incarnation, 

New York, througn Niobrara League. 

14 Robert Anderson (In Memoriam j .. Grace Church, New York, Mrs. James M. Lawton, 

through Nioorara League. 

15 John Andrews Harris St. Paul's, through Indians' Hope Association, Phila- 

delphia (Chestnut Hill), Pa. 

16 Paulo Post (In Memoriam) "A Member," Holy Trinity Church, Philadelphia, Pa. 

17 The Misses Masters School The Misses Masters School, Dobbs Ferry, N. Y. 

18 George L. Harrison Number I .... .A member of the Church, Pniiadeiphia, Pa. 

19 William Woodward St. Peter's Sunday-school, Baltimore, Md. 

ic Alonzo Potter Grace Church, Indian Committee, New York. 

21 Bishop Bedell " A Friend,' New York. (Endowed.) 

11 M. A. DeW. Howe Bishop Stevens and Henry Spackman Bible-classes, St. 

Luke's Cnurch, Philadelphia, ^Kensington), Pa. 

23 Church of the Saviour Church of the Saviour Sundav-school, Philadelphia, 

(W.), Pa. 

24 Bertha " A Member," St. Luke's, Montciair, N. J., through 

Woman's Auxiliary. 

25 St. Elizabeth St. Asaph's Sunday-school, Bala, Pa. 

26 Mary Spingler Van Beuren (In f Mrs. Fred T. Van Beuren, Cnurch of the Ascension, 

Memoriam) ( New York, through Niobrara League. 

27 Schmelzel Memorial Miss Jane E. Schmelzel, New York, through Niobrara 

League. 

28 William Mercer Grosvenor Incarnation, Missionary League, New York, N. Y., 

Niobrara League. 

29 Percy Browne St. James' Sunday-school, Boston (Highlands), Mass. 

30 C. C. Tiffanv . , Zion and St. Timothv's, through Niobrara League, New 

York, N. Y. 

31 Bishop Brewer .Trinity Sunday-school, Watertown, N. Y. 

32 Bishop Doane . . .St. Peter's, Woman's Auxiliary, Albany, N. Y. 

33 Samuel Lawrence (In Memoriam) .Mrs. S. Lawrence, Church of the Transfiguration, New 

York, N. Y., through Niobrara Lea iue. (Endowed, | 

34 Thomas Bale h fin Memoriam) .... Endowed by Miss E. W . Balch, Philadelphia, Pa. 

35 Rev. H. E. Montgomery A Member of the Woman's Auxiliary, New York, V. Y., 

through Niobrara League. 

36 Wm. Lewis Morris, Jr., I n Mem. ) . Mrs. George Cabot Ward, Church of the Incarnation, 

New York, N. Y., through Niobrara League. 
3~ Morris and Cora McGraw Memorial . Annunciation, Miss Cora McGraw, Woman's Auxiliarv, 

Nev Orleans, La. 

38 Frederick F. Johnson Miss Alice L. Lane, through Niobrara League, New 

York. 

?9 Lindsay Parker... St. Peter's Sunday-school, Brooklyn, N. Y. 

40 William Hobart Hare ll, L," Chicago, Hi. 



[5 



<7fTHIS pamphlet may be obtained from the Cor- 
responding Secretary, 281 Fourth Avenue, 
New York, bv calling for pamphlet No. 620. 

All offerings for Indian Missions should be sent to 
Mr. George Gordon King, Treasurer, Church 
Missions House, 281 Fourth Avenue, New York. 



[1] 6-ic CP. 3 m 








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N. MANCHESTER, 
INDIANA 



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A > o « * * 



